Do you know that using smartphones at night could cause you blindness?
Yes, scientists have discovered that constantly using your phone at
night will one day rob you of your sight.
A short-lived optical sensation can lead some smartphone users to
mistakenly believe they've lost sight in one eye, British doctors
report.
The temporary vision loss can affect people who read their smartphone in
the dark while lying on their side, explained Dr. Gordon Plant, an
ophthalmologist with Moorfields Eye Hospital in London.
When they stop reading and get up to do something else, they might
suddenly lose vision in the eye they've been using to read their
smartphone, said Plant, senior author of a paper on the phenomenon.
Luckily, it's a temporary condition that lasts for several minutes, with
no risk of permanent damage, he added.
Plant said he wrote the paper because these people might think they've suffered a stroke or some other medical emergency.
"I have seen a dozen or so similar cases," Plant said.
"The reason I wish to make this known is because it leads to anxiety and
unnecessary investigation because the patients -- and their doctors --
think they have had a transient ischemic attack."
A TIA is a temporary loss of blood circulation in the brain that can
serve as a warning sign for stroke.
The optical trick results from the eye's ability to adapt to dark
conditions, Plant said. It's similar to how your vision may become dim
when you move from a very bright space to a very dark location.
"The patients are looking at their phone in the dark lying on their
side," he said. "If on their left side, the left eye is occluded by the
pillow and they are viewing the phone with the right eye. The left eye
is adapted to the dark and the right eye is adapted to the light."
When they switch off the phone, Plant said, they can't see with the
light-adapted eye in the dark, as it takes several minutes to adjust to
the dark. However, they can see with the dark-adapted left eye, and so
they think that they have lost vision in the right eye, he explained.
The paper cites two case studies -- a 22-year-old woman who'd suffered
recurring bouts of nighttime vision loss in her right eye for several
months, and a 40-year-old woman who would wake up with a loss of vision
in one eye that lasted as long as 15 minutes.
Both women went through a battery of tests, including MRIs and
echocardiograms, before doctors figured out it was a trick of the eyes
caused by reading a smartphone in the dark while lying in bed.
Plant figures the effect could be caused by any device that generates a
bright light, but adds that the solution is "easy -- look at the phone
with both eyes."
That way, both eyes will maintain the same adaptation to light, he said.
Another eye specialist agreed.
"If you look at your smartphone or your e-reader with both eyes you
won't have this surprise of losing your vision, which obviously is very
scary for anyone, even if it's temporary," said Dr. Rahul Khurana, an
ophthalmologist in Mountain View, Calif.
Khurana said this information can help doctors avoid ordering expensive
brain scans and other testing. Instead, they can start their
investigation by simply asking patients a few questions about their
smartphone use.
"A lot of times when people have temporary loss of vision, there are so
many potential causes of it that we aren't always thinking of something
as simple" as light adaptation, said Khurana, an expert with the
American Academy of Ophthalmology.
The report was published in the June 23 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

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